Two Illinois Pols Among Congress' "Most Corrupt"

“You have to have confidence in principals," Daley said, according to the Sun-Times. "Say a child gets a C-plus. You know that child can achieve. He or she could be a slow reader. Or they’re not a good tester. This idea [that] you’re gonna test everybody — you’re gonna have very few people in the 99.9 percentile."

Daley argued that there's no political intrusion at the schools.

“You have someone calling. Yes, there’s been an alderman call on behalf of their child," Daley said. "But, the principal is gonna say, ‘This is not right for your child. I can get this child in. But, they’re never gonna compete. They’re never gonna move ahead. So what is the best interest of the child?’”

Last month, Chicago Board of Education President Michael Scott was subpoenaed to testify before a federal grand jury investigating the clout scandal. School officials then demanded the names of every student who applied to be among the five percent group handpicked by principals.